hidden europe 5

Here is an extended table of contents for hidden europe 5 with brief summaries and excerpts of every article published in this issue of the magazine. Of course you can read the full version of all articles in the print edition of hidden europe 5, which is still available for sale. It was published in November 2005. So much of what features in hidden europe is timeless - as relevant and thought provoking today as it was on the day it was published.

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editorial

Welcome to hidden europe 5, which features Tallinn and rural Estonia, the Polish city of Wroclaw, follows the Tito trail in Belgrade, maps central Europe and visits Father Frost in Russia.

feature

Hidden europe evokes the spirit of two Estonias - the urban chic of Tallinn and remote rurality in Polvamaa county

feature

The Polish city of Wroclaw carries a flame kindled in a territory hundreds of miles away to the east

feature

In search of Santa Claus' Russian comrade, hidden europe visits Veliky Ustyug in northern Russia

feature

Guest contributor Laurence Mitchell follows the Tito trail in Belgrade - in a town that is still uncertain about how to handle its communist past and its legendary leader

perspective

There used to be western Europe and eastern Europe - now there is central Europe too! hidden europe ponders a definition

hidden histories

Guest contributor Adam J Shardlow looks beneath the streets of the Eternal City

special spaces

We track down two monuments that claim to mark the spot at the very centre of Europe

words

Two poems - one Polish and one Maltese - that probe the boundaries of an enlarging European Union

sights

Hidden europe introduces the latest UNESCO World Heritage Site: Struve's Geodetic Arc

routes

Extreme engineering on Europe's canals with long tunnels in England and France

moments

A tribute to the Belgian entrepreneur Georges Nagelmackers, founder of the Wagons-Lits company

flightscan

A small airport in the Slovakian High Tatras reopens for business

snippet

Street iconography that is more than commercial branding

snippet

Ferry operators Smyril Line and Fjord Line merge - and one of the most historic North Sea crossings disappears

snippet

Arriving at Lviv airport recently, the hidden europe team was pleasantly surprised to find that trolleybuses are still a regular sight on the streets of the Ukrainian city. This prompted us to track down Europe's longest trolleybus route.

snippet

The towns of the so-called Spis confederation in Slovakia - a vivid reminder of a Saxon past

snippet

A monument that commemorates a meeting that never took place

preview

A look ahead at hidden europe 6